el Ta ia. Now OPENED, —— Lx CASPIA N— RIBBONS, TURQUOISES. SILESIAS, aug. 24—6in COTTON, & Eaitor. Sear VOL. 4. winitted BLACK LUSTRES, BROWN LUSTRES, DRESS LININGS! ! —_ —— eh AT LONDON HOUSE! A. McNEILL, (HABLOTTRTOWN, woderate) rates. May 21, 1877. uctioneer and Commission Merchant NO. il QU EEN STREET, P, B, ISLAND AUCTION SALES, of all descrtp- tions, attended to in city and country al _~_— RASPBERRY, STRAWBERRY. SYRUPS GINGERWINFE- LEMON, in .6 and 26 SUITABLE FOR TEA PARTIES. par VEY CALAP. Galion Kegs, CARVELL BROS, WANTED, HE Highest Cash price paid for Calf Skins aud Sheep sklis. ROBERT B ne2t—tudfr tf 32 EMEDEBER, Electors of Ch’town, REMEMBER THAT THE DAILY BKXAMINER is daily on Sale at the Stores of — H. A. HARVIE, South Side Queen St. T, O'CONNELL, Lower Queen St. tHEO. L. CHAPPELL, North Side Queen St. - -——— ROYAL HOTEL, Saint Sohn. King square, CONTINENTAL, he reputation o she Provinces. tion. Blackhall’s Livery Stable attached. , July 3, 1877—6m — HAVE much pleasure in informing my nu 1 merous friends and the public generally, that Jhave leased the Hotel formerly known as the aod thoroughly renovated the same,making it, asthe ROYAL always had Tacieg, one of the best Hotels in Excellent Bill of Fare, First-class Wines Liquors and Cigars, and superior accommoda THOS, F. RAYMOND. OF ENGLAND. —— QUEEN INSURANCE CO. Capital -- fwo Millions Sterling, ee eee errant effected on all kinds o Baildings, Merchandise, and Produce Also, on Vessels on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences, Lasseg settled promptly, June — GEORGE MACLEOD (Union*Banx), Agent for Prince Edward Island PLASTER PARIS! 5 () BBLS. now on hand. Ch’town, Aug.j25—pat ar 2W CARVELL BROS, SATURDAY Steamer Arrangements. | — en eee ee Prince Edward island STEAMERS. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT. re Nova Scotia. Leave §Charlottctown for Pictou _every MonDAY, WEDNEsDAY, TuuRspDAy, «€ SATURDAY mornings, at 5 o'clock, con- necting there at 10 a. m., with train for Haiifax. Fare to Halifax, $4.10. Picnic Parties of Twenty and upwards can obtain Return Tlckets at Charlotte- town Office to Pictou and back same day $1.00 each. Returning to Chariottet own. Leave Pictou every TugsDAY, WEDNESDAY Fripbay and SATURDAY, abont 2.30 p.m. on arrival of evening train, from Hali- fax. CAPE BRETON. ave Pictou for Hawkesbury every Mon- pay and THURspay, on arrival of morning train from Halifax, connecting both ways with stage and Steamer *‘Neptune,” to and from Sydney and Bras d’Or Lake. Returning to Pictou same nights, connect- iuy with 10 a.m. Train TugsDay and Fri- DAY for Halifax. New Brunswick, Canada and United States, Leaves SUMMERSIDE every day (Sunday 2xcepted) on arrival of morning train from Charlottetown, connecting at Snrgrprac with trains for each of above named places, and at St. John with Steamers of INTERNaA- TIONAL Co. for PORTLAND and Boston, Also, leave Charlottetown for Summerside every Monday morning, about 3 o’clock, Returning, leaves SHEDIAC every day (Sandays excepted) on arrival of day train trom St. Jony, for Summerside; connect there, without delay, with train for Char- lottetown. Also, leaves Summerside for Charlottetown every Saturday evening, about 6 o'clock. Agents: AtmMon & Macintosh, Halifax; Noonan & Davies, Pictou; A Grant & Co Hawkesbury * HaNrrRD{}Bros., St. John. F. W. HALES. te ONLY DIRECT LINE Steamers Carll and Worester OTI Steamers are fitted with new Boll e rs, and their Passenger accomodation arranged for every convenience and com- fort, and fitted up in elegant style. FREIGHT carried at moderate rates and as low as by ary other route. EGGS in boxes and barrels handled, with the greatest care. SAVING TIME, only one business day used in reaching Boston, by leaving here Saturday Morning and catching steamer at Hal.fax, and arriving at Boston iMonday morning, LEAVE CHARLOTTETOWN Eivery "Thursday, — punctually at 5 p.m. LEAVE BOSTON Kivery Saturdny, unctually at noon. CARVELL 8ROS.,Agent. Ch’town, June 7,877 Parks’ Cotton Yarns, WARDED the only Medal, given tot “*& COTTON YARNS of Canadian Manu fucturs at the CEN.ENNIAL EXHIBITION. TO : ——— MORNING - = a Excursion Tickets. T) BOSTON AND RETURN, STEAMERS CARBOLL & WORCEST ER Kor $15,000, CARVELL BROS ~ Se MONTREAL & ACADIAN STEAMSHIP LINE. HASZARD BROS., Agents. Montreal, Charlottetown, P. E.°.1,, Sydney, C. B., & St. John’s, N, F. 8. §. « VENRZIA,” 8, 8. * VALETTA,” Capt. Johi A. Macmarsters Capt. Daniel Anderson Should sufficient freight offer, it is in- tended to run the steamers of this line during the present season, regularly, be- tween the above mentioned ports. The at- tention of importers is directed to the ad-~ vantages offered. ‘The steamers are in all respects first-class, well found staunch, and well adapted for the route, having exs cellent passenger accommodation. All freight delivered in good order at lowest rates. For freight or passage apply to HASZARD BROS., Agents: July 16, 1877—eod tf QUEBEC & GULE PO BTS cal Steamship __ Company ! “SECRET,” - “ MIRAMICHI” (after arrival of Monday Aflernoor SHEDIAC (after arrival of from St. John and Halifax) every Tuesday Afternoon; CHARLOTTETOWN, every Tuesday, Morning; SUMMERSIDE Tuesday — —— — Above Named Places, LOW RATES.4 CARVELL'BROS, Agents. Ch’town, June 16, 1877.—md&th ISOM S455 AT THE STORES OF Chappelle, and T. O’Connell. Price Only 2 Cents June 27, 1877—her_1 J. F. McKay, (NortH SimpE Queen ,SQuARE) American and Geneva Watches, Gold and Silver; Laties & Gents Chains, Gold and Silver; Plain & Fancy Rings, Watch White Blue, Red; Orange, and Green. Warranted full length and weight. Stronger and better than any other Yarn | n the market. Cotton Carpet Warp. No, 12’s 4 PLY IN ALI, COLORS. | } Werranted fast. WM. PARKS’ & SON, New Biuoswick'Cotton Mills ts a St. John,N_B. eMayp26 775 Nos. 5’s to 10's, | Gold Lockets, Brooches, Earrings, Studs, Silver Zhimbles, etc ALSO Watches, Clocks, and Jewelry skiltally repaired.—Satisfaction guaranteed, and a work warranted. Aug. 21—1lm ‘House and shop to Cet. (PRE House and Shop occupied by the subscriber, containing 16 rooms; a large Shop, with a large and deep cellar, | and large yard, suited for a Shop and a large Boarding House, corner of Queen and Kent Stheets. Apply to oe ner id P. TERLIZZICK. Ch’town, Aug. 28—6in : duct, CAPT. DAVIDSON. CAPT. BAQUEP. iquities, but it is our duty as free electors. Pasbebiae, Perce, Gaspe, Rather Point, and al QUICK TIME DALTON McCARTHY ON THE & PURE? AND * ECONOMICAL?” GOVERN- MENT. omemal HOW THEY ‘‘ ELEVATED THE sTANDARD.”’ In the course of his speech at Coburg, Dalton McCarthy said :— He (Mr. Cartwright) and Mr. Macken. zie had taken pains to deprecate alleged hard language on the part of their oppon-» ents. Hehad refused, he said, to follow the Conservative leaders in abuse. Re- garding Mr. Mackenzie's views on this question he would read an extract from one of his recent speeches and contrast it with the manner in which the Finance Minister conducted himself in that vePy county. Mr. Mackinzie said at Kensing- ton :— ‘ Political warfare ought always to be respectable, and I can honestly say on be- half of those whom I lead, and [ think J can also claim it for myself, that we have made every effort to make those party conflicts in which we have been engaged as as respectable and as moderate as it was possible to do.” That was Mr. Mackenzie’s statement. He had taken every opportunity of maks ing political warfare respectable, to keep it within proper bounds, and not to follow the conduct of those ferocious men, as he called the Opposition, who were hastening his Government to destruction, At New- market he said :— “Let those blunders be pointed out, let there be a free and impartial criticism of every act of my administration—yes, of my life, public or private—but let not mys self and other members of the Government be made the subjects of a mere system of reviling, of gross slanders, which have no real existence even in the heated imagin- ation cf those who uttered them, those gentlemen who are so very anxious to fill our shoes, and occupy the places from which they have been driven by the ins dignant public opinion of an indignant country.”’ Did Mr. Cartwright act up to those high- sounding principles, regarding the con- duct of politics, ina respectable manner ? No, he went to Colborne, and there, from a public platform, in the hearing of some who were no doubt present, spoke as fol» lows “I dislike exceedingly to deal severely with my political opponents.” Poor Mr. Cartwright, how much he dis- liked it! tions of public policy than discuss those ins as administrators of a free Government, V ILL LEAN & a:te nately from PICTOU | when we see acts of this kind committed to call things by their proper names. Of the Train from Halifax) every Monday Midnight; | three culprits—from Mr. Cumberland, the Tuesday Train} Managing Director of the road, who was |} the immediate instrument in embezzling, ‘tor the stealing (to speak in plain Eng- every | lish)—”’ Stealing! Very moderate language. —‘‘from that highly respectable indi- vidual, Mr. Senator Macpherson, the very respectable receiver of the stolen goods, knowing them to be stolen—” Moderate language, it would be observ, ed! One of the Senators of the Dominion, aman of unblemished honour and integ- rity, far superior to Mr. Cartwright, who never was in the Court of Chancery for al- leged breach of trust, it might be observ. | ed, is characterized the receiver of stolen THE f { LY tH Hl : Hl goods, knowing them to be stolen. That i was what Mr. Cartwright cailed repectable language ! ‘‘ ———-t0 Sir John Macdonald, who wisely and judiciously, and with that acumen which he has so long practi ed, declined : to know whence the money came, declined Henry A, Harvie, Theoph. L. to have anything to do with it, but had it placed in the hands of his wife's trustees. and does not even pretend to say that the money was honestly got, but is unhappily too poor to make restitution—of these then [ say it is a difficult matter to say which is the worst, but if there is any dif- ference at all I think the man who has so astutely kept himself clear of the possible “| penalties was the worst of the party.” This was spoken of the man who had obtained honors from our Sovereign, who had been a leading man for over thirty Has jast received a varied assortment of'| years, filling the most important positions in the gift of a free people, and he was characterized as worse than a thief or the receiver of stolen goods. That was mak- ing politics respectable with a vengeance That was the way the Reformers wanted to carry On their political warfare and yet no one was allowed to impute motives to the actions of Mr. Mackenzie. No one must say there had been any jobs, nor allege that Mr. Mackenzie had a brother Charles, nor state there wasa Georgian Bay or a Goderich Harbor contract, but the Finance Minister was to be at liberty to brand one of the leading men of this country as worse than a thief, as worse than a receiver of stolen goods, and thereby to insult, not merely the party of which he was the ais» tinguished leader, but every man in Canada. (Applause.) And what of the Finance Minister? Would it be believed that this man, who prided himself on his desire to make politics respectable, sat in the House of Commons face to face with |Sir John Macdonald, and when the matter /was being discussed, did not dare get up | there and say that he (Sir John) was worse ‘than a thief, and that he and Senator Mc- 'Pherson had been guilty of improper con< (Hear, hear.) No, he waited till “I would rather meet them on ques-, - - SEPTEMBER 8 1877. NO. 98 he had an opportunity to make the charge where there was noone present to con- tradict it, and he made it in the hope that it would into the ear of some one who would, probably, not bein a position to hear it refuted. Applause.) Sir John had no more to do with that $25,000 than he (Mr. McCarthy) or the audience had. His friends thought that under the cir- cumstances he was entitled toa compli- ment at the hands of the people, and they made their subscriptions and placed them in a fund which was settled upon Lady Macdonald. The names of the donors for very good reasons, which would occur to every One, were not communicated to Sir John. He was then the leading man of the Government, and it would have been perhaps difficult to him to have refused favors to those whom he might know had subscribed. And for that among other reasons it was kept secret from him. Mr. Cartwright knew all that. He heard Sir John say it, and he must also have read Sir John Macdonald's sworn testimony that such was the case. And yet he could, in the face of Canada, stand up and declare that Sir John was worse than a thief. [Shame.] Gifts of that kind had been made o other statesmen. On three different occasions were gifts made to Mr. Cobden, the eminent Free Trader, and the names of the parties who subscribed money as donations to him were kept secret; and after Cobden’s death the envelopes contains ing the names were found sealed and un- Opened. But what was right in Cobden was a crime in Sir John Macdonald in the eyes of those who, the country was told, were making politics respectable. [Ap- plause.] And it was the same with Mr, McPherson; he went to da. Joha Ross, Mr Cumberland, and Mr. J. B. Robinson for subscriptions to the testimonial, The two former subscribed $1,000 each, and the latter $500. Itwas true that this money was paid out of the funds of the Northern Railway Company, and he [Mr. McCarthy} was not going to say whether that was right or wrong. That was a matter for Mr. Cumberland to settle. He was a servant of the Company; the members of the Com« pany had a right to say whether he was guilty of a breach of trust or not, and to his [Mr. McCarthy's] knowledge, some of the stockholders had sought to make him responsible. But it came out that many persons had gone to Mr. Cumberland for subscriptions, and he bad given to churches and charities, and the subsciiptions were, invarisbly paid out of the funds of the Northern Railway Company. Were the churches which received the subscriptions, and the charities to which alms were given dishonest, because they received what was given totem? Or was it only because the money in question was given to a politi- cian that there was a dishonest act com» mitted by tke receipents ? The truth was that the slanders of last session had fallen still-born he might say. Last session the Government was assailed pretty briskly— ferociously Mr. Matkenzie called it—by the Opposition, and instead of defending thems selves as they could have done had they been acting in the interest of the country, they started scandal after scandal on Sir John Macdonald. There was the Secret Service slander which they had found would only go down with those politicians who at the bidding of the leaders were ready to Lelieve that black was white, and that white was no colour at all. The people of the country who loved fair play object. ed to their course, and they would find that they could not get the yeomanry of this country to stand by them while they hunted and hounded a man down. | Hear hear; Thanking his hearers then for their paitent hearing, and expressing regret that time would not allow him to speak any longer, in consideration of the fact that there were other speakers to follow him, he took his seat amidst loud applause. + - om + — — PARTY MOVEMENTS. The Liberal«Conservative demonstration in Coburg on the 29th ult,, was a grand success, the attendance being very large, The town was handsomely decorated and appropriate mottoes were displayed at many points. Col. Boulton occupied the chair, and speeches were made by Mr, toseyear, M. P. P., Mr. McCarthy, M. P.. Hon. M. C. Cameron, Hon. W. Macs dougall and Sir John Macdonald. The day’s proceedings closed with a monster torchlight procession anda grand display of fireworks. [he demonstration was the grandest seen in Coburg since the visit of the Prince of Wales.— 8, Intelligencer, The Napanee Standard says: “The Lib- eral-Conservative Associations of Lennox and Addington are now busily engaged in perfecting arrangements for the demons stration to be held in the Crystal Palace Ground on T'vesday, 11th September next. Sir John A. Macdonald and Hon, C. Tup- per will positively be present, the latter coming from Halifax direct to this demon- stration. The town will be decorated with arches, flags, mottoes and evergreen, and the 1]th prox. will be a day memorable in the annals of Napanee. The programme includes a procession, lunch for the in- vited guests, speeches and a banquét in the evening.” —eae fhe Archbishop of York has just con- secrated a fine church, erected at Went. worth, near Rotherham, by Eurl Fitz» williams and other members of the family, to perpetuate the memory of their parents, at a cost of £25 000. nips aaa, eet ce aa a = ers Tre i Sse eae Mang f 5 a z